In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
Follow Mister Maker on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mistermaker)

published:01 Mar 2017

views:53623

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

published:20 Nov 2017

views:161932

published:31 Mar 2017

views:9

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass art work combining lead crystal and dichroic glass using a cold-glass process. The process itself which required several weeks to produce even one completed glass sculpture was incredibly intense and physically challenging, and the number of glass artisans working in this form of fine art could be counted on one hand. Working side by side with the artisan for over a year, Jack learned every component and facet of this incredibly challenging and rare art form and eventually was a strong enough sculptor to branch out on his own in 2004 and open StormWorks Studios.
Both challenged and inspired by having been told that his vision was impossible, one of Jack’s first major accomplishments as an independent glass artist was to invent and design a cold-working lathe that offers him the ability to turn glass and sculpt shapes with curves and details like one would produce from a wooden medium. Early memories of studying his father’s craftsmanship as he worked for hours in his own studio with a wooden lathe provided him with the blueprint of his vision, and his intense drive and deeply embedded passion as a glass artist combined with the inspiration that came from the idea of pioneering new trails in the world of fine art motivated him toward this remarkable accomplishment.
The intense cold-glass process which can take up to 24 weeks for each contemporary glass sculpture to come to life begins at the heart of the design, by creating a core of lead crystal which is cut, polished and laminated creating reflective mirrors. When wrapped in optical glass, the refraction of light as it passes through the glass creates rainbows of hypnotic color. The drawn out process of repetitive cutting, grinding and polishing requires intense passion, rigid self discipline, and more blood sweat and tears than any artisan could wrap their mind around. The results, are mind boggling works of contemporary glass art.
Drawing inspiration from both his heart and his mind when conceiving his artistic designs, at the heart of each lead crystal sculpture by Jack Storms lays the theory of Fibonacci, a great mathematician that articulated the natural math seen in nature. Natural beauty is created, not manufactured. From the repetition florets of a flower to the scales of a pineapple’s skin, Fibonacci numbers are found in the pattern of growth of every living thing in nature.
In spite of the intense natural talent born to Jack’s very talented hands, it was only a couple of years after the opening of Storm Works Studios that Jack found himself desperately seeking some amazing source of inspiration to keep him producing his incredibly beautiful and artistically brilliant glass sculptures. It was in true fairytale love story form that the serendipitous hand of fate brought him a beautiful princess that would rescue him from himself. True love brought Jack to his wife Vivian, and Vivian brought Jack through his stormy weather helping him find his inspiration again, and jumping in feet first to completely support Jack’s dreams and everything that meant to StormWorks Studio’s allowing Jack’s glass studio to flourish. A match made in heaven, Jack and Vivian married and brought their son Owen into the world.
Jack’s complex heart and deeply rooted emotions make him an exemplary caretaker for his family, who are the driving force behind his creative inspiration. Only one muse inspired glass sculpture in Jack’s collection, the Viviovo sculpture beams with radiant light and colors from within having been modeled after the intense beauty and fire burning within his wife Vivian.

published:04 Aug 2014

views:5401007

published:26 Nov 2013

views:55965

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

published:30 Nov 2016

views:52453

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

Modern art

Modern art includes artistic work produced during the period extending roughly from the 1860s to the 1970s, and denotes the style and philosophy of the art produced during that era. The term is usually associated with art in which the traditions of the past have been thrown aside in a spirit of experimentation. Modern artists experimented with new ways of seeing and with fresh ideas about the nature of materials and functions of art. A tendency away from the narrative, which was characteristic for the traditional arts, toward abstraction is characteristic of much modern art. More recent artistic production is often called contemporary art or postmodern art.

Art

Art is a diverse range of human activities in creating visual, auditory or performing artifacts – artworks, expressing the author's imaginative or technical skill, intended to be appreciated for their beauty or emotional power. In their most general form these activities include the production of works of art, the criticism of art, the study of the history of art, and the aesthetic dissemination of art.

The oldest form of art are visual arts, which include creation of images or objects in fields including painting, sculpture, printmaking, photography, and other visual media. Architecture is often included as one of the visual arts; however, like the decorative arts, it involves the creation of objects where the practical considerations of use are essential—in a way that they usually are not in a painting, for example. Music, theatre, film, dance, and other performing arts, as well as literature and other media such as interactive media, are included in a broader definition of art or the arts. Until the 17th century, art referred to any skill or mastery and was not differentiated from crafts or sciences. In modern usage after the 17th century, where aesthetic considerations are paramount, the fine arts are separated and distinguished from acquired skills in general, such as the decorative or applied arts.

Contemporary art

Contemporary art is art produced at the present period in time. Contemporary art includes, and develops from, postmodern art, which is itself a successor to modern art. In vernacular English, "modern" and "contemporary" are synonyms, resulting in some conflation of the terms "modern art" and "contemporary art" by non-specialists.

Scope

Some define contemporary art as art produced within "our lifetime," recognizing that lifetimes and life spans vary. However, there is a recognition that this generic definition is subject to specialized limitations.

The classification of "contemporary art" as a special type of art, rather than a general adjectival phrase, goes back to the beginnings of Modernism in the English-speaking world. In London, the Contemporary Art Society was founded in 1910 by the critic Roger Fry and others, as a private society for buying works of art to place in public museums. A number of other institutions using the term were founded in the 1930s, such as in 1938 the Contemporary Art Society of Adelaide, Australia, and an increasing number after 1945. Many, like the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston changed their names from ones using "Modern art" in this period, as Modernism became defined as a historical art movement, and much "modern" art ceased to be "contemporary". The definition of what is contemporary is naturally always on the move, anchored in the present with a start date that moves forward, and the works the Contemporary Art Society bought in 1910 could no longer be described as contemporary.

Mister Maker

Mister Maker is a preschool television series commissioned by Michael Carrington at the BBC for CBeebies. The series launched in 2007 and also airs on BBC One and BBC Two. In the United States and Latin America the series airs on the Discovery Familia network, dubbed in Spanish and in Portuguese in Brazil. To date three series have been commissioned from The Foundation (part of RDF Media). It also airs in Australia on ABC2. The series comprises a mixture of animation and real time content. A total of 3 spin-offs were produced, Mister Maker Comes To Town, Mister Maker Around the World and Mister Maker's Arty Party, which began airing on CBeebies in 2010, 2013 and 2015 respectively. Mister Maker is portrayed by Phil Gallagher.

Max Ernst

Biography

Early life

Max Ernst was born in Brühl, near Cologne, the third of nine children of a middle-class Catholic family. His father Philipp was a teacher of the deaf and an amateur painter, a devout Christian and a strict disciplinarian. He inspired in Max a penchant for defying authority, while his interest in painting and sketching in nature influenced Max to take up painting himself. In 1909 Ernst enrolled in the University of Bonn, studying philosophy, art history, literature, psychology and psychiatry. He visited asylums and became fascinated with the art of the mentally ill patients; he also started painting that year, producing sketches in the garden of the Brühl castle, and portraits of his sister and himself. In 1911 Ernst befriended August Macke and joined his Die Rheinischen Expressionisten group of artists, deciding to become an artist. In 1912 he visited the Sonderbund exhibition in Cologne, where works by Pablo Picasso and post-Impressionists such as Vincent van Gogh and Paul Gauguin profoundly influenced his approach to art. His own work was exhibited the same year together with that of the Das Junge Rheinland group, at Galerie Feldman in Cologne, and then in several group exhibitions in 1913.

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
Follow Mister Maker on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mistermaker)

25:03

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

3:22

HTWW Contraptions (TMAM) (The Modern Art Maker)

HTWW Contraptions (TMAM) (The Modern Art Maker)

HTWW Contraptions (TMAM) (The Modern Art Maker)

56:26

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

Modern Art Maker - Web Tool for making backgrounds of Curved Lines

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass art work combining lead crystal and dichroic glass using a cold-glass process. The process itself which required several weeks to produce even one completed glass sculpture was incredibly intense and physically challenging, and the number of glass artisans working in this form of fine art could be counted on one hand. Working side by side with the artisan for over a year, Jack learned every component and facet of this incredibly challenging and rare art form and eventually was a strong enough sculptor to branch out on his own in 2004 and open StormWorks Studios.
Both challenged and inspired by having been told that his vision was impossible, one of Jack’s first major accomplishments as an independent glass artist was to invent and design a cold-working lathe that offers him the ability to turn glass and sculpt shapes with curves and details like one would produce from a wooden medium. Early memories of studying his father’s craftsmanship as he worked for hours in his own studio with a wooden lathe provided him with the blueprint of his vision, and his intense drive and deeply embedded passion as a glass artist combined with the inspiration that came from the idea of pioneering new trails in the world of fine art motivated him toward this remarkable accomplishment.
The intense cold-glass process which can take up to 24 weeks for each contemporary glass sculpture to come to life begins at the heart of the design, by creating a core of lead crystal which is cut, polished and laminated creating reflective mirrors. When wrapped in optical glass, the refraction of light as it passes through the glass creates rainbows of hypnotic color. The drawn out process of repetitive cutting, grinding and polishing requires intense passion, rigid self discipline, and more blood sweat and tears than any artisan could wrap their mind around. The results, are mind boggling works of contemporary glass art.
Drawing inspiration from both his heart and his mind when conceiving his artistic designs, at the heart of each lead crystal sculpture by Jack Storms lays the theory of Fibonacci, a great mathematician that articulated the natural math seen in nature. Natural beauty is created, not manufactured. From the repetition florets of a flower to the scales of a pineapple’s skin, Fibonacci numbers are found in the pattern of growth of every living thing in nature.
In spite of the intense natural talent born to Jack’s very talented hands, it was only a couple of years after the opening of Storm Works Studios that Jack found himself desperately seeking some amazing source of inspiration to keep him producing his incredibly beautiful and artistically brilliant glass sculptures. It was in true fairytale love story form that the serendipitous hand of fate brought him a beautiful princess that would rescue him from himself. True love brought Jack to his wife Vivian, and Vivian brought Jack through his stormy weather helping him find his inspiration again, and jumping in feet first to completely support Jack’s dreams and everything that meant to StormWorks Studio’s allowing Jack’s glass studio to flourish. A match made in heaven, Jack and Vivian married and brought their son Owen into the world.
Jack’s complex heart and deeply rooted emotions make him an exemplary caretaker for his family, who are the driving force behind his creative inspiration. Only one muse inspired glass sculpture in Jack’s collection, the Viviovo sculpture beams with radiant light and colors from within having been modeled after the intense beauty and fire burning within his wife Vivian.

11:04

PS4: Playroom Trophy Guide 100% + 1 DLC

PS4: Playroom Trophy Guide 100% + 1 DLC

PS4: Playroom Trophy Guide 100% + 1 DLC

3:15

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

1:36

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

3:45

Abstract and Modern art painting by Swarez

Abstract and Modern art painting by Swarez

Abstract and Modern art painting by Swarez

Watch my new video shot by film maker Andy Cheng. I tackle three pieces in this short film including an unpublished drip work in the first part of the film.

Making mobiles can be a ton of fun. However, when your blade gets the wigglejiggles, fun can quickly turn to frustrating.
What are the wigglejiggles? Great question! Watch the video to find out.
When you do, you’ll also learn:
* The techniques I use to eliminate the wigglejiggles in a classic Calder-style mobile
*The 3 tools you need to securely attach your mobile blades to your wire arms
*How to make a wigglejiggle-free mobile every time (or at least not chop your finger off)
You can see more of my work online and in person at:
* www.MarkLearyDesigns.com
* www.mobilosity.net
* www.etsy.com/shop/mobilosity
* www.hangingmobilegallery.com/mark-leary/
* furnish. (Bend, OR) [http://www.furnishdesign.com/]
* Red BrickGallery (Ventura, CA) [http://redbrickart.com/]
* Milwaukee Art Museum (Mil, WI) [http://mam.org/]
* University of Michigan, Museum of Art (Ann Arbor, MI) [https://store.umma.umich.edu/]
* Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, MO) [http://www.kemperart.org/]
* The Original Dinerant (PDX, OR) [http://www.originaldinerant.com/]

0:47

How to make modern art in five steps ??

How to make modern art in five steps ??

How to make modern art in five steps ??

Really easy to make . Plz try like my video and don't forget to subscribe

10:03

Max Ernst | HOW TO SEE the artist with MoMA curator Anne Umland

Max Ernst | HOW TO SEE the artist with MoMA curator Anne Umland

Max Ernst | HOW TO SEE the artist with MoMA curator Anne Umland

Max Ernst is often described in textbooks as a key Dada or Surrealist artist, but throughout his long career, he worked across many mediums transforming everyday images into visionary dreamscapes. MoMA curator Anne Umland explores his life and works as a painter, sculptor, collage maker and poet in MoMA's new exhibition, “Max Ernst: BeyondPainting.”
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Anne in “How to See Francis Picabia”
http://bit.ly/2wz7qiR
Learn more about the exhibition: “Max Ernst: Beyond Painting”
mo.ma/maxernst
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #maxernst #dada #surrealism #beyondpainting #kunst

3:23

#5 Pallet Wood Sound Wave Art - DIY Curious Creator

#5 Pallet Wood Sound Wave Art - DIY Curious Creator

#5 Pallet Wood Sound Wave Art - DIY Curious Creator

In this video I show how I printed a song sound wave onto a pallet wood board. It is great home decor or a brilliant gift for family or loved one. I love using upcycled pallet wood but mixing it with modern art like printing. Soundwave Art.
Follow me on Social Media;
https://www.facebook.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.twitter.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.instagram.com/acuriouscreator/
For a written guide and a shopping list, check out my Instructables;
https://www.instructables.com/id/Pallet-Wood-Song-Sound-Wave/

ArtStudio in TriBeCa New York next door to Casey Neistat
Shanetownley.com
http://Instagram.com/shanetownley
_____________________________________________
AbstractTriptych - Each Panel is 12x48
Watch the process as New York ArtistShane Townley goes through to create an abstract piece. Watch a painting from beginning to end through the artists studio. If you don’t like horror music, turn off the sound cause Its not changing it after the video has gone viral.

BBC The Medici Makers of Modern Art

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
Follow Mister Maker on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mistermaker)

published: 01 Mar 2017

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations tha...

Monet, Modern Art's Maker

Modern Art Maker - Web Tool for making backgrounds of Curved Lines

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass...

published: 04 Aug 2014

PS4: Playroom Trophy Guide 100% + 1 DLC

published: 26 Nov 2013

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

published: 30 Nov 2016

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

published: 27 Jan 2015

Abstract and Modern art painting by Swarez

Watch my new video shot by film maker Andy Cheng. I tackle three pieces in this short film including an unpublished drip work in the first part of the film.

Making mobiles can be a ton of fun. However, when your blade gets the wigglejiggles, fun can quickly turn to frustrating.
What are the wigglejiggles? Great question! Watch the video to find out.
When you do, you’ll also learn:
* The techniques I use to eliminate the wigglejiggles in a classic Calder-style mobile
*The 3 tools you need to securely attach your mobile blades to your wire arms
*How to make a wigglejiggle-free mobile every time (or at least not chop your finger off)
You can see more of my work online and in person at:
* www.MarkLearyDesigns.com
* www.mobilosity.net
* www.etsy.com/shop/mobilosity
* www.hangingmobilegallery.com/mark-leary/
* furnish. (Bend, OR) [http://www.furnishdesign.com/]
* Red BrickGallery (Ventura, CA) [http://redbrickart.com/]
* MilwaukeeArtMuse...

published: 17 Aug 2017

How to make modern art in five steps ??

Really easy to make . Plz try like my video and don't forget to subscribe

published: 12 May 2017

Max Ernst | HOW TO SEE the artist with MoMA curator Anne Umland

Max Ernst is often described in textbooks as a key Dada or Surrealist artist, but throughout his long career, he worked across many mediums transforming everyday images into visionary dreamscapes. MoMA curator Anne Umland explores his life and works as a painter, sculptor, collage maker and poet in MoMA's new exhibition, “Max Ernst: BeyondPainting.”
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Anne in “How to See Francis Picabia”
http://bit.ly/2wz7qiR
Learn more about the exhibition: “Max Ernst: Beyond Painting”
mo.ma/maxernst
The comments and opinions expressed in this video ...

published: 05 Oct 2017

#5 Pallet Wood Sound Wave Art - DIY Curious Creator

In this video I show how I printed a song sound wave onto a pallet wood board. It is great home decor or a brilliant gift for family or loved one. I love using upcycled pallet wood but mixing it with modern art like printing. Soundwave Art.
Follow me on Social Media;
https://www.facebook.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.twitter.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.instagram.com/acuriouscreator/
For a written guide and a shopping list, check out my Instructables;
https://www.instructables.com/id/Pallet-Wood-Song-Sound-Wave/

published: 20 May 2017

#two2x4challenge Wrap Up | Modern Maker Podcast

Here are the results of the #two2x4challlenge. This was a lot of fun and we got way more results than we were expecting. We tried to give highlight every project, but if we missed on, be sure and let us know so that we can clink it in the description below. Thanks for all the support!.
VideoLinks:
---------------------------------
MauiHooks : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-IoSKib0bM
Crochet Set: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iA3gP7oGDYs
A Glimpse Inside: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtf6bJ0XHfK4xcVe7dFzu2A
Longboard/ Skateboard: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBacnDO25Ik
LichtenburgTable: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSBYJ6m_nT0
Chris’s Kid’s Bench: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9V-tpmdn_s
Mike’sPicture Frame: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdmEQdBFSsk
M...

ArtStudio in TriBeCa New York next door to Casey Neistat
Shanetownley.com
http://Instagram.com/shanetownley
_____________________________________________
AbstractTriptych - Each Panel is 12x48
Watch the process as New York ArtistShane Townley goes through to create an abstract piece. Watch a painting from beginning to end through the artists studio. If you don’t like horror music, turn off the sound cause Its not changing it after the video has gone viral.

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a...

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
Follow Mister Maker on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mistermaker)

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
Follow Mister Maker on Twitter (https://twitter.com/mistermaker)

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that...

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

Modern Art Maker - Web Tool for making backgrounds of Curved Lines

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com...

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms....

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass art work combining lead crystal and dichroic glass using a cold-glass process. The process itself which required several weeks to produce even one completed glass sculpture was incredibly intense and physically challenging, and the number of glass artisans working in this form of fine art could be counted on one hand. Working side by side with the artisan for over a year, Jack learned every component and facet of this incredibly challenging and rare art form and eventually was a strong enough sculptor to branch out on his own in 2004 and open StormWorks Studios.
Both challenged and inspired by having been told that his vision was impossible, one of Jack’s first major accomplishments as an independent glass artist was to invent and design a cold-working lathe that offers him the ability to turn glass and sculpt shapes with curves and details like one would produce from a wooden medium. Early memories of studying his father’s craftsmanship as he worked for hours in his own studio with a wooden lathe provided him with the blueprint of his vision, and his intense drive and deeply embedded passion as a glass artist combined with the inspiration that came from the idea of pioneering new trails in the world of fine art motivated him toward this remarkable accomplishment.
The intense cold-glass process which can take up to 24 weeks for each contemporary glass sculpture to come to life begins at the heart of the design, by creating a core of lead crystal which is cut, polished and laminated creating reflective mirrors. When wrapped in optical glass, the refraction of light as it passes through the glass creates rainbows of hypnotic color. The drawn out process of repetitive cutting, grinding and polishing requires intense passion, rigid self discipline, and more blood sweat and tears than any artisan could wrap their mind around. The results, are mind boggling works of contemporary glass art.
Drawing inspiration from both his heart and his mind when conceiving his artistic designs, at the heart of each lead crystal sculpture by Jack Storms lays the theory of Fibonacci, a great mathematician that articulated the natural math seen in nature. Natural beauty is created, not manufactured. From the repetition florets of a flower to the scales of a pineapple’s skin, Fibonacci numbers are found in the pattern of growth of every living thing in nature.
In spite of the intense natural talent born to Jack’s very talented hands, it was only a couple of years after the opening of Storm Works Studios that Jack found himself desperately seeking some amazing source of inspiration to keep him producing his incredibly beautiful and artistically brilliant glass sculptures. It was in true fairytale love story form that the serendipitous hand of fate brought him a beautiful princess that would rescue him from himself. True love brought Jack to his wife Vivian, and Vivian brought Jack through his stormy weather helping him find his inspiration again, and jumping in feet first to completely support Jack’s dreams and everything that meant to StormWorks Studio’s allowing Jack’s glass studio to flourish. A match made in heaven, Jack and Vivian married and brought their son Owen into the world.
Jack’s complex heart and deeply rooted emotions make him an exemplary caretaker for his family, who are the driving force behind his creative inspiration. Only one muse inspired glass sculpture in Jack’s collection, the Viviovo sculpture beams with radiant light and colors from within having been modeled after the intense beauty and fire burning within his wife Vivian.

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass art work combining lead crystal and dichroic glass using a cold-glass process. The process itself which required several weeks to produce even one completed glass sculpture was incredibly intense and physically challenging, and the number of glass artisans working in this form of fine art could be counted on one hand. Working side by side with the artisan for over a year, Jack learned every component and facet of this incredibly challenging and rare art form and eventually was a strong enough sculptor to branch out on his own in 2004 and open StormWorks Studios.
Both challenged and inspired by having been told that his vision was impossible, one of Jack’s first major accomplishments as an independent glass artist was to invent and design a cold-working lathe that offers him the ability to turn glass and sculpt shapes with curves and details like one would produce from a wooden medium. Early memories of studying his father’s craftsmanship as he worked for hours in his own studio with a wooden lathe provided him with the blueprint of his vision, and his intense drive and deeply embedded passion as a glass artist combined with the inspiration that came from the idea of pioneering new trails in the world of fine art motivated him toward this remarkable accomplishment.
The intense cold-glass process which can take up to 24 weeks for each contemporary glass sculpture to come to life begins at the heart of the design, by creating a core of lead crystal which is cut, polished and laminated creating reflective mirrors. When wrapped in optical glass, the refraction of light as it passes through the glass creates rainbows of hypnotic color. The drawn out process of repetitive cutting, grinding and polishing requires intense passion, rigid self discipline, and more blood sweat and tears than any artisan could wrap their mind around. The results, are mind boggling works of contemporary glass art.
Drawing inspiration from both his heart and his mind when conceiving his artistic designs, at the heart of each lead crystal sculpture by Jack Storms lays the theory of Fibonacci, a great mathematician that articulated the natural math seen in nature. Natural beauty is created, not manufactured. From the repetition florets of a flower to the scales of a pineapple’s skin, Fibonacci numbers are found in the pattern of growth of every living thing in nature.
In spite of the intense natural talent born to Jack’s very talented hands, it was only a couple of years after the opening of Storm Works Studios that Jack found himself desperately seeking some amazing source of inspiration to keep him producing his incredibly beautiful and artistically brilliant glass sculptures. It was in true fairytale love story form that the serendipitous hand of fate brought him a beautiful princess that would rescue him from himself. True love brought Jack to his wife Vivian, and Vivian brought Jack through his stormy weather helping him find his inspiration again, and jumping in feet first to completely support Jack’s dreams and everything that meant to StormWorks Studio’s allowing Jack’s glass studio to flourish. A match made in heaven, Jack and Vivian married and brought their son Owen into the world.
Jack’s complex heart and deeply rooted emotions make him an exemplary caretaker for his family, who are the driving force behind his creative inspiration. Only one muse inspired glass sculpture in Jack’s collection, the Viviovo sculpture beams with radiant light and colors from within having been modeled after the intense beauty and fire burning within his wife Vivian.

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorical...

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is th...

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

Making mobiles can be a ton of fun. However, when your blade gets the wigglejiggles, fun can quickly turn to frustrating.
What are the wigglejiggles? Great qu...

Making mobiles can be a ton of fun. However, when your blade gets the wigglejiggles, fun can quickly turn to frustrating.
What are the wigglejiggles? Great question! Watch the video to find out.
When you do, you’ll also learn:
* The techniques I use to eliminate the wigglejiggles in a classic Calder-style mobile
*The 3 tools you need to securely attach your mobile blades to your wire arms
*How to make a wigglejiggle-free mobile every time (or at least not chop your finger off)
You can see more of my work online and in person at:
* www.MarkLearyDesigns.com
* www.mobilosity.net
* www.etsy.com/shop/mobilosity
* www.hangingmobilegallery.com/mark-leary/
* furnish. (Bend, OR) [http://www.furnishdesign.com/]
* Red BrickGallery (Ventura, CA) [http://redbrickart.com/]
* Milwaukee Art Museum (Mil, WI) [http://mam.org/]
* University of Michigan, Museum of Art (Ann Arbor, MI) [https://store.umma.umich.edu/]
* Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, MO) [http://www.kemperart.org/]
* The Original Dinerant (PDX, OR) [http://www.originaldinerant.com/]

Making mobiles can be a ton of fun. However, when your blade gets the wigglejiggles, fun can quickly turn to frustrating.
What are the wigglejiggles? Great question! Watch the video to find out.
When you do, you’ll also learn:
* The techniques I use to eliminate the wigglejiggles in a classic Calder-style mobile
*The 3 tools you need to securely attach your mobile blades to your wire arms
*How to make a wigglejiggle-free mobile every time (or at least not chop your finger off)
You can see more of my work online and in person at:
* www.MarkLearyDesigns.com
* www.mobilosity.net
* www.etsy.com/shop/mobilosity
* www.hangingmobilegallery.com/mark-leary/
* furnish. (Bend, OR) [http://www.furnishdesign.com/]
* Red BrickGallery (Ventura, CA) [http://redbrickart.com/]
* Milwaukee Art Museum (Mil, WI) [http://mam.org/]
* University of Michigan, Museum of Art (Ann Arbor, MI) [https://store.umma.umich.edu/]
* Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art (Kansas City, MO) [http://www.kemperart.org/]
* The Original Dinerant (PDX, OR) [http://www.originaldinerant.com/]

Max Ernst | HOW TO SEE the artist with MoMA curator Anne Umland

Max Ernst is often described in textbooks as a key Dada or Surrealist artist, but throughout his long career, he worked across many mediums transforming everyda...

Max Ernst is often described in textbooks as a key Dada or Surrealist artist, but throughout his long career, he worked across many mediums transforming everyday images into visionary dreamscapes. MoMA curator Anne Umland explores his life and works as a painter, sculptor, collage maker and poet in MoMA's new exhibition, “Max Ernst: BeyondPainting.”
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Anne in “How to See Francis Picabia”
http://bit.ly/2wz7qiR
Learn more about the exhibition: “Max Ernst: Beyond Painting”
mo.ma/maxernst
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #maxernst #dada #surrealism #beyondpainting #kunst

Max Ernst is often described in textbooks as a key Dada or Surrealist artist, but throughout his long career, he worked across many mediums transforming everyday images into visionary dreamscapes. MoMA curator Anne Umland explores his life and works as a painter, sculptor, collage maker and poet in MoMA's new exhibition, “Max Ernst: BeyondPainting.”
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Anne in “How to See Francis Picabia”
http://bit.ly/2wz7qiR
Learn more about the exhibition: “Max Ernst: Beyond Painting”
mo.ma/maxernst
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #maxernst #dada #surrealism #beyondpainting #kunst

#5 Pallet Wood Sound Wave Art - DIY Curious Creator

In this video I show how I printed a song sound wave onto a pallet wood board. It is great home decor or a brilliant gift for family or loved one. I love using ...

In this video I show how I printed a song sound wave onto a pallet wood board. It is great home decor or a brilliant gift for family or loved one. I love using upcycled pallet wood but mixing it with modern art like printing. Soundwave Art.
Follow me on Social Media;
https://www.facebook.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.twitter.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.instagram.com/acuriouscreator/
For a written guide and a shopping list, check out my Instructables;
https://www.instructables.com/id/Pallet-Wood-Song-Sound-Wave/

In this video I show how I printed a song sound wave onto a pallet wood board. It is great home decor or a brilliant gift for family or loved one. I love using upcycled pallet wood but mixing it with modern art like printing. Soundwave Art.
Follow me on Social Media;
https://www.facebook.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.twitter.com/acuriouscreator/
https://www.instagram.com/acuriouscreator/
For a written guide and a shopping list, check out my Instructables;
https://www.instructables.com/id/Pallet-Wood-Song-Sound-Wave/

ArtStudio in TriBeCa New York next door to Casey Neistat
Shanetownley.com
http://Instagram.com/shanetownley
_____________________________________________
AbstractTriptych - Each Panel is 12x48
Watch the process as New York ArtistShane Townley goes through to create an abstract piece. Watch a painting from beginning to end through the artists studio. If you don’t like horror music, turn off the sound cause Its not changing it after the video has gone viral.

ArtStudio in TriBeCa New York next door to Casey Neistat
Shanetownley.com
http://Instagram.com/shanetownley
_____________________________________________
AbstractTriptych - Each Panel is 12x48
Watch the process as New York ArtistShane Townley goes through to create an abstract piece. Watch a painting from beginning to end through the artists studio. If you don’t like horror music, turn off the sound cause Its not changing it after the video has gone viral.

BBC The Medici Makers of Modern Art

published: 13 Aug 2017

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations tha...

#two2x4challenge Wrap Up | Modern Maker Podcast

Here are the results of the #two2x4challlenge. This was a lot of fun and we got way more results than we were expecting. We tried to give highlight every project, but if we missed on, be sure and let us know so that we can clink it in the description below. Thanks for all the support!.
VideoLinks:
---------------------------------
MauiHooks : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v-IoSKib0bM
Crochet Set: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iA3gP7oGDYs
A Glimpse Inside: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCtf6bJ0XHfK4xcVe7dFzu2A
Longboard/ Skateboard: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBacnDO25Ik
LichtenburgTable: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSBYJ6m_nT0
Chris’s Kid’s Bench: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m9V-tpmdn_s
Mike’sPicture Frame: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gdmEQdBFSsk
M...

Masaki Sakurai - Documentary

All proceeds from monetization of this video goes to the GSIFoundation, a non-profit organization that raises money to support music education in public schools. For more information, please visit: https://www.guitarsalon.com/foundation.php.
From the "Virtuosos" Japanese television show. This episode showcases the life and work of famed Japanese classical guitar maker Masaki Sakurai (nephew of legendary luthier Masaru Kohno), interviewing the maestro in his workshop and showcasing his history and some insights on his approach to lutherie. Also profiles his company 'Gendai GuitarCompany' and features performances by renown guitarist Shinichi Fukuda, Shunsuke Matsuo and others.
For more information on Sakurai and Kohno guitars, please visit their Guitar SalonInternational page: http://w...

published: 05 Aug 2013

The Art of Making a Nixie Tube

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was replaced with LED displays. The complex knowledge of manufacture of nixie tubes literally died with tube factory's engineers, glassblowers and machine operators.
I discovered nixie tubes in 2011 and since then, I've devoted all my time to studies of nixie tubes and its manufacturing processes. After years of intensive work, with help of many people, I eventually succeeded and have revived the knowledge and equipment for production of nixie tubes.
Dalibor Farny
Subscribe: http://www.daliborfarny.com/newsletter
Read more on:
Our website: http://www.daliborfarny.com/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/daliborfarnycom
Thank you for attention!

published: 29 Sep 2016

Art III: Modern 1800–2000, with Rick Steves

Subscribe at http://goo.gl/l6qjuS for more new travel lectures! When France erupts in Revolution, the modern world is born. Art styles follow the march of history: Neoclassical artists celebrate democracy while passionate Romantics champion the individual. The 20th century brings two World Wars, ideological turmoil, and equally wild art. Finally, Rick brings you right up to date with the birth of the European Union and the vibrant world of Europe today. Download the PDF handout for this class: https://goo.gl/Clu5tr
This talk was filmed during the Rick StevesEuropeanTravelFestival on Nov. 1, 2015. Any special promotions mentioned are no longer valid.
At http://www.ricksteves.com, you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts,...

published: 19 Dec 2014

Minecraft - How to build a modern house 5

A tutorial in how to build a great modern house in minecraft.
Easy and fast to build!
ShockFrostProd. 2016 (c)

TALK by Sumesh Sharma Drawing as a Radical Script hosted at LE26BY on December 12th 2017

How do we read drawings? What is a drawing? Are scripts initial forms of conceptual radical interpretation? Why do people in Clark House draw? The film-maker Jean Bhownagary drew to conceive practice as an artist besides experimentation in film, magic, mime and performance. Krishna Reddy drew to sculpt , print and scratch on copper plates. Amol K Patil writes scripts of performances redrawing his grandfather's poetry into images that are the detritus of his performances. RanjeetaKumari draws donkeys as self-portraits of her own hard-work to strive as an artist despite biases of gender , race and caste. Saviya Lopes weaves with her grandmother quilts as drawings that preserve memories. Shiva Gor speaks Gormati, a language spoken by gypsies in India ,proposing a script of stones, while Sudh...

published: 06 Jan 2018

Maker: The Art of Terry Borman

A film that explores the life and work of world renowned luthier Terry Borman.

Fine Art Slideshow Screensaver for flatscreen (2-hours, no sound)

Tag your favorite painting with a comment featuring timestamp. To view same slideshow WITH classical music, go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3FMzIRSIMc NOTICE: I do not own this material, nor am I profiting from this content. "CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."

published: 04 Feb 2014

Samurai Sword: Making of a Legend - Full Movie | Snagfilms

This story of the Katana sword provides a unique insight into the Samurai masters and the swords they use. Probably the most recognised of all martial arts weapons, the Katana and the art of japanese sword making is awe inspiring. This up-close look at the making of and fighting with a Katana provides an explosive and visually stunning piece of cinematography.
Download Our Apple or Android Apps: http://bit.ly/Snag_Apps
WatchFreeMoviesOnline: http://bit.ly/snag_films
Like Us On Facebook: http://bit.ly/snag_fb
Follow Us On Twitter: http://bit.ly/Snag_Tweets

published: 28 Mar 2016

Maker Cities

For a Maker culture to thrive it needs a healthy habitat: affordable workspaces, tools and supplies, job training and entrepreneurship services, makerspaces, and celebrations. Four people actively engaged in building MakerCities discuss state of the art initiatives, policies and recipes towards better Maker habitat.

Making Acoustic Steel-string Guitars
Did you enjoy this video? Please rate and leave a comment for us! (｡◕‿‿◕｡)
Sign up to our newsletter for web series updates and future giveaway contests: http://eepurl.com/bLFBXP
MeetMichael Greenfield, a musician who began tuning, repairing, restoring, and making guitars in the 70s and since then has become a seasoned luthier of bespoke guitars. Having experience with vintage and antique guitar repair and restoration, he brings a unique insight to his craft, creating personalized musical instruments and functional works of art for artists, collectors and those who deserve the very best.
His workshop is based in Montreal, where we visited over a period of 5 months, filming as he and his apprentice, Julien, transformed slices of spruce, ebony, mahoga...

published: 11 Sep 2016

Tuesday Evenings at the Modern - Luca Dellaverson

"Exuberance is beauty," William Blake said, and Luca Dellaverson's show is nothing if not exuberant. This 28-year-old artist has energy, ideas, ambition, and desire, along with an admirable sense of respect of art world elders and history. His paintings abound with references to literary, artistic, and pop culture figures ranging from Robert Graves, Cady Noland and David Hammons to Jurassic Park references. . . . More interesting is the element of undoing in this work, the way in which the artist makes and then breaks down his source connections, so to speak, undoing and defacing conventional ideas of painting, beauty, form, and structure. Benjamin Genocchio, “Luca Dellaverson’s Art of Undoing at Jack Tilton Speaks for a New Generation of American Artists,” artnet, July 2, 2015
Luca Della...

published: 18 Oct 2017

Contemporary Art and the Global Turn in China at the Guggenheim

In this lecture, presented in conjunction with the exhibition Wang Jianwei: TimeTemple, Dr. Thomas J. Berghuis, The RobertH. N. Ho FamilyFoundationCurator of Chinese Art, examines the development of contemporary art in China in the context of the global turn. He focuses on art produced after the turn of the 21st century, as China began positioning itself at the center of a new world order and as an origin from which to observe increasing globalization. The presentation examines the role of artists in China, such as Wang Jianwei, who consider new alternatives in addressing universal forms, and who strive for more pluralistic visions of culture and identity in their work.
This lecture was presented as part of The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Lecture Series.

published: 06 Apr 2015

Francis Bacon: A Brush with Violence (2017)

Francis Bacon was the loudest, rudest, drunkest, most sought-after British artist of the 20th century. Twenty-five years after his death, his canvases regularly exceed £40million at auction. Bacon's appeal is rooted in his notoriety - a candid image he presented of himself as Roaring Boy, Lord of Misrule and Conveyor of Artistic Violence. This was true enough, but only part of the truth. He carefully cultivated the facade, protecting the complex and haunted man behind the myth. In this unique, compelling film, those who knew him speak freely, some for the first time, to reveal the many mysteries of Francis Bacon.

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that...

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
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https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

Masaki Sakurai - Documentary

All proceeds from monetization of this video goes to the GSIFoundation, a non-profit organization that raises money to support music education in public school...

All proceeds from monetization of this video goes to the GSIFoundation, a non-profit organization that raises money to support music education in public schools. For more information, please visit: https://www.guitarsalon.com/foundation.php.
From the "Virtuosos" Japanese television show. This episode showcases the life and work of famed Japanese classical guitar maker Masaki Sakurai (nephew of legendary luthier Masaru Kohno), interviewing the maestro in his workshop and showcasing his history and some insights on his approach to lutherie. Also profiles his company 'Gendai GuitarCompany' and features performances by renown guitarist Shinichi Fukuda, Shunsuke Matsuo and others.
For more information on Sakurai and Kohno guitars, please visit their Guitar SalonInternational page: http://www.guitarsalon.com/blog/?p=4145

All proceeds from monetization of this video goes to the GSIFoundation, a non-profit organization that raises money to support music education in public schools. For more information, please visit: https://www.guitarsalon.com/foundation.php.
From the "Virtuosos" Japanese television show. This episode showcases the life and work of famed Japanese classical guitar maker Masaki Sakurai (nephew of legendary luthier Masaru Kohno), interviewing the maestro in his workshop and showcasing his history and some insights on his approach to lutherie. Also profiles his company 'Gendai GuitarCompany' and features performances by renown guitarist Shinichi Fukuda, Shunsuke Matsuo and others.
For more information on Sakurai and Kohno guitars, please visit their Guitar SalonInternational page: http://www.guitarsalon.com/blog/?p=4145

The Art of Making a Nixie Tube

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was replaced with LED displays. The complex knowledge of manufacture of nixie t...

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was replaced with LED displays. The complex knowledge of manufacture of nixie tubes literally died with tube factory's engineers, glassblowers and machine operators.
I discovered nixie tubes in 2011 and since then, I've devoted all my time to studies of nixie tubes and its manufacturing processes. After years of intensive work, with help of many people, I eventually succeeded and have revived the knowledge and equipment for production of nixie tubes.
Dalibor Farny
Subscribe: http://www.daliborfarny.com/newsletter
Read more on:
Our website: http://www.daliborfarny.com/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/daliborfarnycom
Thank you for attention!

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was replaced with LED displays. The complex knowledge of manufacture of nixie tubes literally died with tube factory's engineers, glassblowers and machine operators.
I discovered nixie tubes in 2011 and since then, I've devoted all my time to studies of nixie tubes and its manufacturing processes. After years of intensive work, with help of many people, I eventually succeeded and have revived the knowledge and equipment for production of nixie tubes.
Dalibor Farny
Subscribe: http://www.daliborfarny.com/newsletter
Read more on:
Our website: http://www.daliborfarny.com/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/daliborfarnycom
Thank you for attention!

TALK by Sumesh Sharma Drawing as a Radical Script hosted at LE26BY on December 12th 2017

How do we read drawings? What is a drawing? Are scripts initial forms of conceptual radical interpretation? Why do people in Clark House draw? The film-maker Je...

How do we read drawings? What is a drawing? Are scripts initial forms of conceptual radical interpretation? Why do people in Clark House draw? The film-maker Jean Bhownagary drew to conceive practice as an artist besides experimentation in film, magic, mime and performance. Krishna Reddy drew to sculpt , print and scratch on copper plates. Amol K Patil writes scripts of performances redrawing his grandfather's poetry into images that are the detritus of his performances. RanjeetaKumari draws donkeys as self-portraits of her own hard-work to strive as an artist despite biases of gender , race and caste. Saviya Lopes weaves with her grandmother quilts as drawings that preserve memories. Shiva Gor speaks Gormati, a language spoken by gypsies in India ,proposing a script of stones, while Sudheer Rajbhar uses leather as a vocational material for an artistic practice, AmanNegi involves himself in portraits and Birender Yadav deconstructing portraits of migrant labour. Naresh Kumar performs the idea of silence through photography. Tejswini Sonawane like Krishna Reddy imprints her fears in surreal scapes of animal bodies negating violence.
Mark Coombs proposed the idea of reimagination of drawing by using photos he took on a Super8 camera, using film stills as drawings to make a larger installation that mapped the space at Clark House. Why does drawing allow us to transcend matters or contexts of materiality or context. What allows Yogesh Barve to propose a script using a mechanical drawing? Understand the history and practice of Clark House through drawings on 12 December.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sumesh Sharma (1983) is an artist , curator & writer. He co-founded the Clark House Initiative, Bombay in 2010 His practice is informed by alternate art histories that often include cultural perspectives informed by socio-economics and politics. Immigrant Culture in the Francophone, Vernacular Equalities of Modernism, Movements of Black Consciousness in Culture are his areas of interest. He was invited curator to the Biennale de Dakar , Dak' ; Art 2016 and CheckpointHelsinki in 2015. He has curated exhibitions at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Metropolitan Museum , New York, Centre Pompidou, Kadist Art Foundation, Paris, Para SiteHong Kong, Villa Vassilieff, Paris, Stedelijk Museum Bureau, Amsterdam, ISCPNew York, Insert 2014, New Delhi among others.
He has been a resident at the LatvianContemporary Art Centre, Riga, Manifesta OnlineResidency, San Art, Vietnam, Cites des Arts , Paris, and was the ICI fellow for Senegal in 2014 where he researched how the funding mechanisms in culture and institutional support of art institutions utilise the power structures put in place by colonial laws. His artist practice seeks layers through political materiality and art historical & theoretical failures while discussing the visual. His Masters in Research at the Universite Paul Cezanne (2008) was an Inquiry into ArtistCareers.

How do we read drawings? What is a drawing? Are scripts initial forms of conceptual radical interpretation? Why do people in Clark House draw? The film-maker Jean Bhownagary drew to conceive practice as an artist besides experimentation in film, magic, mime and performance. Krishna Reddy drew to sculpt , print and scratch on copper plates. Amol K Patil writes scripts of performances redrawing his grandfather's poetry into images that are the detritus of his performances. RanjeetaKumari draws donkeys as self-portraits of her own hard-work to strive as an artist despite biases of gender , race and caste. Saviya Lopes weaves with her grandmother quilts as drawings that preserve memories. Shiva Gor speaks Gormati, a language spoken by gypsies in India ,proposing a script of stones, while Sudheer Rajbhar uses leather as a vocational material for an artistic practice, AmanNegi involves himself in portraits and Birender Yadav deconstructing portraits of migrant labour. Naresh Kumar performs the idea of silence through photography. Tejswini Sonawane like Krishna Reddy imprints her fears in surreal scapes of animal bodies negating violence.
Mark Coombs proposed the idea of reimagination of drawing by using photos he took on a Super8 camera, using film stills as drawings to make a larger installation that mapped the space at Clark House. Why does drawing allow us to transcend matters or contexts of materiality or context. What allows Yogesh Barve to propose a script using a mechanical drawing? Understand the history and practice of Clark House through drawings on 12 December.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sumesh Sharma (1983) is an artist , curator & writer. He co-founded the Clark House Initiative, Bombay in 2010 His practice is informed by alternate art histories that often include cultural perspectives informed by socio-economics and politics. Immigrant Culture in the Francophone, Vernacular Equalities of Modernism, Movements of Black Consciousness in Culture are his areas of interest. He was invited curator to the Biennale de Dakar , Dak' ; Art 2016 and CheckpointHelsinki in 2015. He has curated exhibitions at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Metropolitan Museum , New York, Centre Pompidou, Kadist Art Foundation, Paris, Para SiteHong Kong, Villa Vassilieff, Paris, Stedelijk Museum Bureau, Amsterdam, ISCPNew York, Insert 2014, New Delhi among others.
He has been a resident at the LatvianContemporary Art Centre, Riga, Manifesta OnlineResidency, San Art, Vietnam, Cites des Arts , Paris, and was the ICI fellow for Senegal in 2014 where he researched how the funding mechanisms in culture and institutional support of art institutions utilise the power structures put in place by colonial laws. His artist practice seeks layers through political materiality and art historical & theoretical failures while discussing the visual. His Masters in Research at the Universite Paul Cezanne (2008) was an Inquiry into ArtistCareers.

Tag your favorite painting with a comment featuring timestamp. To view same slideshow WITH classical music, go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3FMzIRSIMc NOTICE: I do not own this material, nor am I profiting from this content. "CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."

Tag your favorite painting with a comment featuring timestamp. To view same slideshow WITH classical music, go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3FMzIRSIMc NOTICE: I do not own this material, nor am I profiting from this content. "CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."

Samurai Sword: Making of a Legend - Full Movie | Snagfilms

This story of the Katana sword provides a unique insight into the Samurai masters and the swords they use. Probably the most recognised of all martial arts weap...

This story of the Katana sword provides a unique insight into the Samurai masters and the swords they use. Probably the most recognised of all martial arts weapons, the Katana and the art of japanese sword making is awe inspiring. This up-close look at the making of and fighting with a Katana provides an explosive and visually stunning piece of cinematography.
Download Our Apple or Android Apps: http://bit.ly/Snag_Apps
WatchFreeMoviesOnline: http://bit.ly/snag_films
Like Us On Facebook: http://bit.ly/snag_fb
Follow Us On Twitter: http://bit.ly/Snag_Tweets

This story of the Katana sword provides a unique insight into the Samurai masters and the swords they use. Probably the most recognised of all martial arts weapons, the Katana and the art of japanese sword making is awe inspiring. This up-close look at the making of and fighting with a Katana provides an explosive and visually stunning piece of cinematography.
Download Our Apple or Android Apps: http://bit.ly/Snag_Apps
WatchFreeMoviesOnline: http://bit.ly/snag_films
Like Us On Facebook: http://bit.ly/snag_fb
Follow Us On Twitter: http://bit.ly/Snag_Tweets

Maker Cities

For a Maker culture to thrive it needs a healthy habitat: affordable workspaces, tools and supplies, job training and entrepreneurship services, makerspaces, an...

For a Maker culture to thrive it needs a healthy habitat: affordable workspaces, tools and supplies, job training and entrepreneurship services, makerspaces, and celebrations. Four people actively engaged in building MakerCities discuss state of the art initiatives, policies and recipes towards better Maker habitat.

For a Maker culture to thrive it needs a healthy habitat: affordable workspaces, tools and supplies, job training and entrepreneurship services, makerspaces, and celebrations. Four people actively engaged in building MakerCities discuss state of the art initiatives, policies and recipes towards better Maker habitat.

Tuesday Evenings at the Modern - Luca Dellaverson

"Exuberance is beauty," William Blake said, and Luca Dellaverson's show is nothing if not exuberant. This 28-year-old artist has energy, ideas, ambition, and de...

"Exuberance is beauty," William Blake said, and Luca Dellaverson's show is nothing if not exuberant. This 28-year-old artist has energy, ideas, ambition, and desire, along with an admirable sense of respect of art world elders and history. His paintings abound with references to literary, artistic, and pop culture figures ranging from Robert Graves, Cady Noland and David Hammons to Jurassic Park references. . . . More interesting is the element of undoing in this work, the way in which the artist makes and then breaks down his source connections, so to speak, undoing and defacing conventional ideas of painting, beauty, form, and structure. Benjamin Genocchio, “Luca Dellaverson’s Art of Undoing at Jack Tilton Speaks for a New Generation of American Artists,” artnet, July 2, 2015
Luca Dellaverson, a New York–based artist, was described in a 2015 artnet review of his solo exhibition at Jack Tilton Gallery in New York as “a thinker, as much as a maker—a thinker who puts ideas into action through the act of undoing.” There is a destructive quality to Dellaverson’s work that seems to suggest the need to destroy in order to begin anew, or perhaps to establish that the act of undoing is a way of fully knowing. (One might be reminded here of Robert Rauschenberg’s act of officially erasing a Willem de Kooning drawing in 1953.) This is, of course, all speculation, but what is certain is that Dellaverson’s process results in something simultaneously beautiful and tragic, within the realm of the sublime.
For Tuesday Evenings, Dellaverson presents his work as it has progressed over the past few years, through exhibitions in New York and in Europe, offering insight within the historical context of painting.

"Exuberance is beauty," William Blake said, and Luca Dellaverson's show is nothing if not exuberant. This 28-year-old artist has energy, ideas, ambition, and desire, along with an admirable sense of respect of art world elders and history. His paintings abound with references to literary, artistic, and pop culture figures ranging from Robert Graves, Cady Noland and David Hammons to Jurassic Park references. . . . More interesting is the element of undoing in this work, the way in which the artist makes and then breaks down his source connections, so to speak, undoing and defacing conventional ideas of painting, beauty, form, and structure. Benjamin Genocchio, “Luca Dellaverson’s Art of Undoing at Jack Tilton Speaks for a New Generation of American Artists,” artnet, July 2, 2015
Luca Dellaverson, a New York–based artist, was described in a 2015 artnet review of his solo exhibition at Jack Tilton Gallery in New York as “a thinker, as much as a maker—a thinker who puts ideas into action through the act of undoing.” There is a destructive quality to Dellaverson’s work that seems to suggest the need to destroy in order to begin anew, or perhaps to establish that the act of undoing is a way of fully knowing. (One might be reminded here of Robert Rauschenberg’s act of officially erasing a Willem de Kooning drawing in 1953.) This is, of course, all speculation, but what is certain is that Dellaverson’s process results in something simultaneously beautiful and tragic, within the realm of the sublime.
For Tuesday Evenings, Dellaverson presents his work as it has progressed over the past few years, through exhibitions in New York and in Europe, offering insight within the historical context of painting.

In this lecture, presented in conjunction with the exhibition Wang Jianwei: TimeTemple, Dr. Thomas J. Berghuis, The RobertH. N. Ho FamilyFoundationCurator of Chinese Art, examines the development of contemporary art in China in the context of the global turn. He focuses on art produced after the turn of the 21st century, as China began positioning itself at the center of a new world order and as an origin from which to observe increasing globalization. The presentation examines the role of artists in China, such as Wang Jianwei, who consider new alternatives in addressing universal forms, and who strive for more pluralistic visions of culture and identity in their work.
This lecture was presented as part of The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Lecture Series.

In this lecture, presented in conjunction with the exhibition Wang Jianwei: TimeTemple, Dr. Thomas J. Berghuis, The RobertH. N. Ho FamilyFoundationCurator of Chinese Art, examines the development of contemporary art in China in the context of the global turn. He focuses on art produced after the turn of the 21st century, as China began positioning itself at the center of a new world order and as an origin from which to observe increasing globalization. The presentation examines the role of artists in China, such as Wang Jianwei, who consider new alternatives in addressing universal forms, and who strive for more pluralistic visions of culture and identity in their work.
This lecture was presented as part of The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation Lecture Series.

Francis Bacon was the loudest, rudest, drunkest, most sought-after British artist of the 20th century. Twenty-five years after his death, his canvases regularly exceed £40million at auction. Bacon's appeal is rooted in his notoriety - a candid image he presented of himself as Roaring Boy, Lord of Misrule and Conveyor of Artistic Violence. This was true enough, but only part of the truth. He carefully cultivated the facade, protecting the complex and haunted man behind the myth. In this unique, compelling film, those who knew him speak freely, some for the first time, to reveal the many mysteries of Francis Bacon.

Francis Bacon was the loudest, rudest, drunkest, most sought-after British artist of the 20th century. Twenty-five years after his death, his canvases regularly exceed £40million at auction. Bacon's appeal is rooted in his notoriety - a candid image he presented of himself as Roaring Boy, Lord of Misrule and Conveyor of Artistic Violence. This was true enough, but only part of the truth. He carefully cultivated the facade, protecting the complex and haunted man behind the myth. In this unique, compelling film, those who knew him speak freely, some for the first time, to reveal the many mysteries of Francis Bacon.

In today’s episode, Mister Maker goes stripy with some amazing modern art. He shows you how to make a milk bottle bird in under a minute, and lastly alongside a few lucky MiniMakers they show you how to turn treasure glittery!
For more Make ideas and step by step instructions, go to http://mistermaker.com
For all the latest Mister Maker news like his page on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MisterMaker)
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25:03

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the belove...

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

10:34

Monet, Modern Art's Maker

Documentary about Claude Monet, his impact on art in history, and the relevance of his suc...

Modern Art Maker - Web Tool for making backgrounds of Curved Lines

This is a tool that is free for your use that I've developed. It makes random Bezier Curved Lines with various options.
Latest version at: http://mt-m-m.com/modernart/
Now you can control it more (less animated fun but more useful). Save to JPG button now!
This is an early version of the program so if you use it and have some cool ideas for expansion, let me know. Please give positive, proactive suggestions for new ideas so it motivates me to expand it, you may get your wishes. :)

This video will tell you all about the cold glass process I use to make my work. I hope you enjoy it and please share if you do!
Website: http://www.jackstorms.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stormsart
Twitter: https://twitter.com/jackhstorms
Instagram: http://instagram.com/stormsjack
Both a tremendous athlete and a motivated student growing up in New Hampshire, it wasn’t until later in life that Jack discovered his passions in contemporary art and graduated at age 30 from Plymouth State University with a BA in Art focusing primarily on studio production. It was during his junior year there that he happened upon what would eventually become an entryway to his legacy, the studio of a glass artist that was close to his school where he was producing a phenomenally rare style of glass art work combining lead crystal and dichroic glass using a cold-glass process. The process itself which required several weeks to produce even one completed glass sculpture was incredibly intense and physically challenging, and the number of glass artisans working in this form of fine art could be counted on one hand. Working side by side with the artisan for over a year, Jack learned every component and facet of this incredibly challenging and rare art form and eventually was a strong enough sculptor to branch out on his own in 2004 and open StormWorks Studios.
Both challenged and inspired by having been told that his vision was impossible, one of Jack’s first major accomplishments as an independent glass artist was to invent and design a cold-working lathe that offers him the ability to turn glass and sculpt shapes with curves and details like one would produce from a wooden medium. Early memories of studying his father’s craftsmanship as he worked for hours in his own studio with a wooden lathe provided him with the blueprint of his vision, and his intense drive and deeply embedded passion as a glass artist combined with the inspiration that came from the idea of pioneering new trails in the world of fine art motivated him toward this remarkable accomplishment.
The intense cold-glass process which can take up to 24 weeks for each contemporary glass sculpture to come to life begins at the heart of the design, by creating a core of lead crystal which is cut, polished and laminated creating reflective mirrors. When wrapped in optical glass, the refraction of light as it passes through the glass creates rainbows of hypnotic color. The drawn out process of repetitive cutting, grinding and polishing requires intense passion, rigid self discipline, and more blood sweat and tears than any artisan could wrap their mind around. The results, are mind boggling works of contemporary glass art.
Drawing inspiration from both his heart and his mind when conceiving his artistic designs, at the heart of each lead crystal sculpture by Jack Storms lays the theory of Fibonacci, a great mathematician that articulated the natural math seen in nature. Natural beauty is created, not manufactured. From the repetition florets of a flower to the scales of a pineapple’s skin, Fibonacci numbers are found in the pattern of growth of every living thing in nature.
In spite of the intense natural talent born to Jack’s very talented hands, it was only a couple of years after the opening of Storm Works Studios that Jack found himself desperately seeking some amazing source of inspiration to keep him producing his incredibly beautiful and artistically brilliant glass sculptures. It was in true fairytale love story form that the serendipitous hand of fate brought him a beautiful princess that would rescue him from himself. True love brought Jack to his wife Vivian, and Vivian brought Jack through his stormy weather helping him find his inspiration again, and jumping in feet first to completely support Jack’s dreams and everything that meant to StormWorks Studio’s allowing Jack’s glass studio to flourish. A match made in heaven, Jack and Vivian married and brought their son Owen into the world.
Jack’s complex heart and deeply rooted emotions make him an exemplary caretaker for his family, who are the driving force behind his creative inspiration. Only one muse inspired glass sculpture in Jack’s collection, the Viviovo sculpture beams with radiant light and colors from within having been modeled after the intense beauty and fire burning within his wife Vivian.

Joshua Miels - Contemporary Portrait Artist

Joshua Miels is a South Australian Adelaide-based contemporary painter and portrait artist. His works possess an uncanny depth - both literally and metaphorically - and here, he discusses his art form, his inspirations, and his creative ethos.
Josh's Instagram: www.instagram.com/JoshuaMiels
Josh's Website: www.joshuamiels.com
Subscribe for new Makers Who Inspire episodes, every week.

1:36

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: htt...

Brooklyn based fiber artist/maker : Gamma Folk (Behind The Scenes)

HD version available on http://vimeo.com/91626640
More info on Gamma Folk in our blog: http://www.shopyoungandable.com/pages/gamma-folk
Lily Piyathaisere is the designer and maker of Gamma Folk, a line of mystical jewelry handmade by Lily combining fiber, natural dyes, ceramics, and crystals. Lily carefully dyes, weaves and knots her creations in her Brooklyn studio using traditional techniques to form completely fresh and modern statement pieces.
We were lucky enough to visit the designer and document her process while making the Necklace No. 9 in Indigo. Take a look at our behind-the-scenes video and learn about this unique designer's vision.
Video by EmilyMalan
Edits by Rena Cheng

3:45

Abstract and Modern art painting by Swarez

Watch my new video shot by film maker Andy Cheng. I tackle three pieces in this short film...

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blueprint

KAWS went from a skater kid doing graffiti around New York City to illustrating the beloved animated series Doug to creating instantly recognizable pop art that gained visibility the world over. The artist, painter, designer and toymaker details how he linked with Nigo and Pharrell in Japan, collaborated with Jordan and Uniqlo for sold-out capsules, and created motifs that elevated fine art into the cultural zeitgeist.
Subscribe to Complex on YouTube: https://goo.gl/43ac5w
Check out more of Complex here:
http://www.complex.com
https://twitter.com/Complex
https://www.facebook.com/complex
http://instagram.com/complex
https://plus.google.com/+complex/
COMPLEX is a community of creators and curators, armed with the Internet, committed to surfacing and sharing the voices and conversations that define our new America. Our videos exemplify convergence culture, exploring topics that include music, sneakers, style, sports and pop culture through original shows and Complex News segments. Featuring your favorite celebrities, authoritative commentary, and a unique voice, our videos make culture pop.

56:26

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A Renaissance Documentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon r...

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Documentary

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art. A RenaissanceDocumentary in which Andrew Graham-Dixon reveals how the Medici family transformed Florence through sculpture, painting and architecture and created a world where masterpieces fetch millions today.
Without the money and patronage of the Medici we might never have heard of artists such as Donatello, Michelangelo or Botticelli. Graham-Dixon examines how a family of shadowy, corrupt businessmen, driven by greed and ambition, became the financial engine behind the Italian Renaissance.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Medici
http://www.history.com/topics/medici-family
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Medici-family
Brian SewellBigArtChallenge UK Art Prize Full Series:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azZUF4eVaIk&list=PLTRal7R3G0f-SI4XoSByxArBodGDHHupR&index=6
UnderstandingContemporary Art Full Course:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GYQIK-gbo8w&list=PLTRal7R3G0f8E9rOf82XbZiBhL6IxzDCJ&index=1
Art After Metaphysics:
http://www.amazon.com/After-Metaphysics-John-David-Ebert/dp/1492765481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450485945&sr=8-1&keywords=art+after+metaphysics
Naked Emperors: Criticisms of English Contemporary Art:
http://www.amazon.com/Naked-Emperors-Criticisms-English-Contemporary-ebook/dp/B00JOS49TC/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1451990337&sr=8-3&keywords=naked+emperors
Art21

1:19:51

#two2x4challenge Wrap Up | Modern Maker Podcast

Here are the results of the #two2x4challlenge. This was a lot of fun and we got way more r...

Masaki Sakurai - Documentary

All proceeds from monetization of this video goes to the GSIFoundation, a non-profit organization that raises money to support music education in public schools. For more information, please visit: https://www.guitarsalon.com/foundation.php.
From the "Virtuosos" Japanese television show. This episode showcases the life and work of famed Japanese classical guitar maker Masaki Sakurai (nephew of legendary luthier Masaru Kohno), interviewing the maestro in his workshop and showcasing his history and some insights on his approach to lutherie. Also profiles his company 'Gendai GuitarCompany' and features performances by renown guitarist Shinichi Fukuda, Shunsuke Matsuo and others.
For more information on Sakurai and Kohno guitars, please visit their Guitar SalonInternational page: http://www.guitarsalon.com/blog/?p=4145

37:50

The Art of Making a Nixie Tube

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was repla...

The Art of Making a Nixie Tube

The nixie tube is a vintage display device which had been used until 70s when it was replaced with LED displays. The complex knowledge of manufacture of nixie tubes literally died with tube factory's engineers, glassblowers and machine operators.
I discovered nixie tubes in 2011 and since then, I've devoted all my time to studies of nixie tubes and its manufacturing processes. After years of intensive work, with help of many people, I eventually succeeded and have revived the knowledge and equipment for production of nixie tubes.
Dalibor Farny
Subscribe: http://www.daliborfarny.com/newsletter
Read more on:
Our website: http://www.daliborfarny.com/
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/daliborfarnycom
Thank you for attention!

1:02:10

Art III: Modern 1800–2000, with Rick Steves

Subscribe at http://goo.gl/l6qjuS for more new travel lectures! When France erupts in Re...

TALK by Sumesh Sharma Drawing as a Radical Script hosted at LE26BY on December 12th 2017

How do we read drawings? What is a drawing? Are scripts initial forms of conceptual radical interpretation? Why do people in Clark House draw? The film-maker Jean Bhownagary drew to conceive practice as an artist besides experimentation in film, magic, mime and performance. Krishna Reddy drew to sculpt , print and scratch on copper plates. Amol K Patil writes scripts of performances redrawing his grandfather's poetry into images that are the detritus of his performances. RanjeetaKumari draws donkeys as self-portraits of her own hard-work to strive as an artist despite biases of gender , race and caste. Saviya Lopes weaves with her grandmother quilts as drawings that preserve memories. Shiva Gor speaks Gormati, a language spoken by gypsies in India ,proposing a script of stones, while Sudheer Rajbhar uses leather as a vocational material for an artistic practice, AmanNegi involves himself in portraits and Birender Yadav deconstructing portraits of migrant labour. Naresh Kumar performs the idea of silence through photography. Tejswini Sonawane like Krishna Reddy imprints her fears in surreal scapes of animal bodies negating violence.
Mark Coombs proposed the idea of reimagination of drawing by using photos he took on a Super8 camera, using film stills as drawings to make a larger installation that mapped the space at Clark House. Why does drawing allow us to transcend matters or contexts of materiality or context. What allows Yogesh Barve to propose a script using a mechanical drawing? Understand the history and practice of Clark House through drawings on 12 December.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Sumesh Sharma (1983) is an artist , curator & writer. He co-founded the Clark House Initiative, Bombay in 2010 His practice is informed by alternate art histories that often include cultural perspectives informed by socio-economics and politics. Immigrant Culture in the Francophone, Vernacular Equalities of Modernism, Movements of Black Consciousness in Culture are his areas of interest. He was invited curator to the Biennale de Dakar , Dak' ; Art 2016 and CheckpointHelsinki in 2015. He has curated exhibitions at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Metropolitan Museum , New York, Centre Pompidou, Kadist Art Foundation, Paris, Para SiteHong Kong, Villa Vassilieff, Paris, Stedelijk Museum Bureau, Amsterdam, ISCPNew York, Insert 2014, New Delhi among others.
He has been a resident at the LatvianContemporary Art Centre, Riga, Manifesta OnlineResidency, San Art, Vietnam, Cites des Arts , Paris, and was the ICI fellow for Senegal in 2014 where he researched how the funding mechanisms in culture and institutional support of art institutions utilise the power structures put in place by colonial laws. His artist practice seeks layers through political materiality and art historical & theoretical failures while discussing the visual. His Masters in Research at the Universite Paul Cezanne (2008) was an Inquiry into ArtistCareers.

25:07

Maker: The Art of Terry Borman

A film that explores the life and work of world renowned luthier Terry Borman.

Fine Art Slideshow Screensaver for flatscreen (2-hours, no sound)

Tag your favorite painting with a comment featuring timestamp. To view same slideshow WITH classical music, go to: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-3FMzIRSIMc NOTICE: I do not own this material, nor am I profiting from this content. "CopyrightDisclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."

BBC The Medici Makers of Modern Art...

How KAWS Became the Face Of Contemporary Art | Blu...

The Medici: Makers of Modern Art Renaissance Docum...

#two2x4challenge Wrap Up | Modern Maker Podcast...

Otis Modern Art 10: Post-Impressionism Pt 3: Gaugu...

Masaki Sakurai - Documentary...

The Art of Making a Nixie Tube...

Art III: Modern 1800–2000, with Rick Steves...

Minecraft - How to build a modern house 5...

Dr. Daniel A. Siedell: Who's Afraid of Modern Art?...

TALK by Sumesh Sharma Drawing as a Radical Script ...

Maker: The Art of Terry Borman...

Vincent van Gogh and his perspective frame - Origi...

Fine Art Slideshow Screensaver for flatscreen (2-h...

Samurai Sword: Making of a Legend - Full Movie | S...

Maker Cities...

Making a Guitar | Handcrafted Woodworking | Où se ...

Tuesday Evenings at the Modern - Luca Dellaverson...

Contemporary Art and the Global Turn in China at t...

Francis Bacon: A Brush with Violence (2017)...

Modern Art

K-hole at the DalÃ­Seeing the unknownWell it might have been a molly'Cause my mind's being blownTake the escalator to the next floorSuch a strong sedator, now I can't find the doorYou turn around and you don't know where you've beenYou look up at the glass dome and the room beings to spinLet's go out and find the ocean 'cause I think we need a swimTurn around, start it over, let's beginLike the minis at the LouvreSpinning down the aisleAnd the paintings of the LouvreNow i'm feeling very smartLike a 3-D picture, stereo's goneIt's a total light picture, kaleidoscopeYou turn around and you don't know where you've beenYou look up at the glass dome and the room beings to spinLet's go out and find the ocean 'cause I think we need a swimTurn around, start it over, let's beginAnd the k-hole at the DalÃ­Seeing the unknownWell it might have been a molly'Cause my mind's being blownYou turn around and you don't know where you've beenYou look up at the glass dome and the room beings to spinLet's go out and find the ocean 'cause I think we need a swim

In August 2016, a research plane was able to observe something strange in the atmosphere above Alaska's Aleutian Islands, lingering aerosol particle that was enriched with the same kind of uranium used in nuclear fuel and bombs, according to Gizmodo. The observation was the first time that scientists detected a particle free-floating in the atmosphere in over 20 years of plane-based observations ... ... -WN.com, Maureen Foody....

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) -- Ethiopia's defense minister on Saturday ruled out a military takeover a day after the East African nation declared a new state of emergency amid the worst anti-government protests in a quarter-century. The United States said it "strongly disagrees" with the new declaration that effectively bans protests, with a U.S ... He also ruled out a transitional government ... Learn more about our and . ....

One day in August 1995 a man called Foutanga Babani Sissoko walked into the head office of the Dubai Islamic Bank and asked for a loan to buy a car. The manager agreed, and Sissoko invited him home for dinner. It was the prelude, writes the BBC's Brigitte Scheffer, to one of the most audacious confidence tricks of all time. Over dinner, Sissoko made a startling claim ... With these powers, he could take a sum of money and double it ... ....

MEXICOCITY. A strong earthquake shook southern and central Mexico Friday, causing panic less than six months after two devastating quakes that killed hundreds of people. No buildings collapsed, according to early reports. But two towns near the epicenter, in the southern state of Oaxaca, reported damage and state authorities said they had opened emergency shelters ... It was also felt in the states of Guerrero, Puebla and Michoacan ... AFP ... ....

Mexico City – A military helicopter carrying officials assessing damage from a powerful earthquake crashed Friday in southern Mexico, killing 13 people and injuring 15, all of them on the ground. The Oaxaca state prosecutor’s office said in a statement that five women, four men and three children were killed at the crash site and another person died later at the hospital ...Alejandro Murat, neither of whom had serious injuries ... The U.S ... ....

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GERING — You can show your love of the arts throughout February at the Legacy of the Plains Museum. Hearts for Arts is a nationwide movement of support for art in museums around the country ... “It’s a great way people can show their appreciation for art and the museum.”....

Art therapy is provided in many different settings ... But today, I experienced art therapy in a refurbished fire station. I observed a session with a group called Women inTransition at The ArtStation in Fort Worth, Texas. The Art Station was founded in 2004 by JaneAvila who wanted to provide a physical space for her community to experience the benefits of art therapy ... Art therapy is near and dear to my heart....

For the entire month, Hong Kong’s arts scene will host an array of arts events planned in various neighbourhoods across the city. Be it world-class art happenings downtown and performing arts programmes from around the world, to unique and exciting arts offerings in local communities, there will be something to suit all tastes during the Hong Kong Arts Month....

We can essentially define many of the historic buildings in Aiken (such as The Willcox, which was almost demolished) as art objects. Art objects, which are rare, irreplaceable, authentic and valuable, as well as of artistic and historical importance, are what pull people into a given art museum and give that museum value, importance and identity....

I have a lot on my plate these days, but when the ArtsCouncil of Winston-Salem and Forsyth County asked me if I would co-chair its 2018 Community Fund for the Arts campaign, I knew it was something I wanted to do. I have served on the Arts Council board and various committees over the years; I support its annual fund drives; and I follow closely its activities ... We have to keep the arts out front — public and apparent and vibrant....

It was back in 2008 that we saw nails become the centre of attention, from full-on neon at MarcJacob’sLouis Vuitton S/S18 show, or DIY leopard print stick-ons from WAH, everyone wanted their nail art to be, well, art. As the trend faded out into more wearable minimalist designs, OTT nail art took a back seat (bar the logo nails trend seen at Helmut Lang last September) - until now ...LondonFashion WeekBeautyNail Art ....